Report: More Than 150 Children Rushed to Emergency Daily for Accidental Medicine Overdoses

A doctor attends to a young patient in the specialist Children's Accident and Emergency department of the 'Royal Albert Edward Infirmary' in Wigan, north west England on April 2, 2015. (Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images)

The findings also show that almost every minute of every day, there is a call made to poison control regarding children and medications.

During the years 2004 to 2013, 2010 had the highest number of medicine-related incidents, with 75,842 children going to emergency rooms. Since then the numbers have declined, but poisoning is still an issue.

“The good news is that education efforts are working,” said Kate Carr, president and CEO of Safe Kids Worldwide in a press release.

“Since Safe Kids and industry and government partners started getting the word out to parents about the importance of keeping kids safe around medicine, the number of ER visits has steadily declined. But there are still too many kids getting into medicine, so education needs to continue to be a priority for all.”

The report shows that medicine use has increased over the years. In 1980, 1.4 billion prescriptions were filled, compared to 4 billion during the year 2013. Over the counter sales have also gone up, with $5.5 billion in revenue, increasing to $30.8 billion in 2014.

Children are finding the drugs primarily in adult’s pillboxes, on the ground, purses or diaper bags, as well as in counters, cabinets, and refrigerators.

The types of medications that children get into are primarily pain and fever remedies, allergy medicine, vitamins, vapo rubs, diaper rash products, eye drops, and laxatives.

Kids are mostly obtaining the medication from their grandparents, accounting for 48 percent of all incidents; 38 percent of children get the medicine from parents, and 7 percent of from siblings.

The rise of children living with their grandparents also contributes to the incidents, with 67 percent of children currently living with them or within 50 miles from them.

Since 5 percent of the incidents involve dosing errors, Safe Kids stated that family and caretakers should only use the measuring device that comes with the medicine.

The organization also suggests that parents put all medicine away from children’s sight.

“We want parents and caregivers to remember that the first line of defense in preventing medicine poisoning is the family,” said Carr.

“Look around your home, and in your purses, to make sure all medicine is out of reach of children. And please, take a few moments to save the Poison Help Number into your phone: 1-800-222-1222. It’s free, it’s available 24/7, and it will put you in touch directly with experts who can help you with an emergency or just with a simple question,” she suggested.